Valentine Democrat. (Valentine, Neb.) 1900-1930, May 03, 1906, Image 7

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    9
mm PHYSICIANS PRESCRIBE
ia Em Plnkfaam's
The wonderful power of Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound over
the diseases of womankind is not be-
it is a stimulant , not because it
palliative , but simply because it is
the most wonderful tonic and recon-
Btructor ever discovered to act directly
upon the generative organs , positively
curing disease and restoring health and
vigor.
Marvelous cures are reported from
all parts of the country by women who
have been cured , trained nurses who
have witnessed cures and physicians
\vho have recognized the virtue of
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com
pound , and are fair enough to give
credit where it is due.
If physicians dared to be frank and
openlnmdreds of them would acknowl
edge that they constantly prescribe
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com
pound in severe cases of female ills , as
they know by experience it can be re
lied upon to effect a cure. The follow
ing letter proves it.
Dr. S. C. Brigham , of 4 Brigham
Park , Fitchburg , Mass. , writes :
"It gives mo jjreat pleasure to .say that 1
have found Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetabls
Compound very efficacious , and often pre
scribe it in my practice for female difficulties.
"My oldest daughter found it very benefi
cial fora femaletrouble some time ago.andmy
youngest daughter is now tailing it for a fe
male weakness , and is surely gaining in health
and strength.
" I advocate it most reliable
freely as a spe
cific in all diseases to which women are sub
ject , and give it honest endorsement. "
Y romen who are troubled with pain
ful or irregular periods , bloating { or
flatulency ) , weakness of organs , dis
placements , inflammation orulceration ,
can be restored to perfect health and
strength by taking Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound. If advice is
needed write to Mrs. Pinkham , at
Lynn , Mass. She is daughter-in-law ;
of Lydia E. Pinkhana and for twenty-
five years has been advising sick
women free of charge. No other liwng
person has had the benefit of a
wider experience in treating female
ills. She has - guided thousands to
health. Every suffering woman should
ask for and follow her advice if sha
tvants to be strong and well.
" POMMEL
WATERPROOF
CLOTHING.
Isrnade ofthe best
SIGN OFTHE FISH
TCY.TR CAKAOUH COJURTO. AJTOWCR CO.
TORONTO. CAN.
Positively cured by
these Little Pills.
They also relieve Dis
tress from. Dyspepsia , In
digestion , and Too Hearty
Eating ; A perfect rem
edy for Dizziness , Nausea ,
Drowsiness , Bad Taste
In tlia Mouth , Coated
Tongue. Pain In the Side.
TORPID LIVER. They
regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable.
SMALL PILL SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE
BARTERS Genuine Must Bear
ITTLE Fac-Simile Signature
IVER
PILLS.
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.
Three preat pursuits have again
showrr wonderful results on the
FREE HOMESTEAD LANDS OF
WES7ERH CANADA
Magnificent climate. Farmers plowing In their
shirt sleeves in the middle of November.
"All are bound to bo more than pleued with tb * final runltl
of the past teuon'i banreits. " Extract.
Coal , wood , water , hay in abundance ; schools ,
t churches , markets convenient. THIS IS
'THE ' ERA. OF * si.oo WHEAT.
Apply fo-lnfo-njation to Superintendent of Imtaigra.
It ion. O tawa , Canada , or to E. T. Holmes. 315 Jackion
Kt. . St.l'uul. Minn. , and J. M. MoLachlan. Box 116.
Wntortown , So.Dakotu , Authorized Government AcinU
PJotse ear wbero jou MW thi * &dTcrtitti&e&t.
A Positive CATARRH
CURE
Ely's Cream Balm
is quickly absorbed.
Gives Relief at Once.
It cleanses , soothes
! heals and protects
, the diseased znem-
1 brane. It cures Ca
tarrh and drives
, away a Cold in the |
Head quickly. o-f
etores the Senses ofil
Taste and Smell. Full size 60 cts. , at Drug.
gists or by mail ; Trial Size 10 cts. by mail
Ely Brothers , C6 Warren Street. New York.
It costs a motorcyclist $12.50 a year
for licenses to drive Sii St. Louis and
Immediate vicinity in St .Louis county.
Him. tYln low * SOOTKOM Bntrr lor
hinr : cofMna th ( nms , rtdocM ioflsmmmuoa , * >
pala. curu Triad oollc. c au * bottl * .
Many of the Jarjje ocean greyhounds
carry cats as mascots , these pets being
.well known to globe trotters.
I BIG BUILDING BOOM
NOW EXISTS THROUGHOUT THE
UNITED STATES.
Heal Estate Craze I on and Middle
Went Farm Valuew Soar Evi
dences of "Wide-Hpread Increase *
in Value Never Before Equaled.
The United States is now in the
midst of one of the greatest real estate
and building booms in its history. So
general is the tendency to invest iu
farms , building lots , homes , sky
scrapers and business blocks that the
banks in the great money centers are
Incommoded by lack of money. Every"
man with a few hundred or a few thou
sand dollars is investing it In realty.
In all the boroughs of Greater /Jew
York there Is enormous and constant
buying of real estate and it is impossi
ble to get men and supplies for all the
building projected.
In Buffalo the industrial growth is
unprecedented. During the past year
27,000 skilled mechanics have been
added to the city's population , brought
there through the location of new
plants and the expansion of those al
ready established. The housing of the
Increased population has required
every vacant house in the city and the
best efforts of the builders have been
unable to keep up with the demand
for flats , apartment houses and busi
ness blocks.
In Philadelphia , especially in West
Philadelphia , the increase in real es
tate values has been from 25 to 30 per
cent , largely due to the construction
of the elevated railway. During the
first three months of this year permits
have been issued for the erection of
28,000 two , three and four story dwell
ings , at an estimated cost of $7,000,000.
In Pittsburg everybody is sjecuLit-
Ing in real estate. Every man with
$1,000 or more is dabbling in it. Prices
are soaring in a way to give the blush
to a western land booom. No. 510
Wood street , bought In 1901 for $7G,000.
sold last month for $200,000. Xo. 518
Wood street , bought in 1902 for $75.-
000 , sold last February for $180,000.
A corner on Penn avenue was pur
chased last winter for $200,000 and was
sold last week for $240,000. A corner
at Fourth aveiuie and Decatur street ,
bought in 1902 for $42,000 , sold last
month for $100,000. Xo. 210 Fourth
avenue , bought three years ago for
$90,000 , sold last mouth for $150,000.
Hundreds of such examples might be
quoted.
In Baltimore the area destroyed by
the great fire has oeen rebuilt and
$100.000,000 worth of improvements are
projected or are under way.
Not in a quarter of a century has
there been such a boom in real estate
values in Omaha and Nebraska. Ne
braska farms are to-day worth $100.-
000,000 more than they were worth
five years ago. Lands which five years
ago were worth $35 an acre are now
valued at $00 to $100. Western Ne
braska range land which was worth
50 cents an acre five years ago is now
quoted at from $8 to $15. In the cities
the increase in values has kept pace
with that of the farm lands. For ex
ample : A church purchased two years
ago for $18,000 was sold last week for
$48,000.
St. Louis is erecting an average of
two sky-scrapers a month and other
building is in proportion.
The prosperity among Illinois farm
ers is unparalleled. Farm land has in
creased from 35 to 100 per cent , in five
years. Chicago real estate men say the
prospect is the brightest in twenty
years.
In the corn belt of Iowa land is
worth $100 an acre , while in sections
reached by the interurban railways
land readily brings $600 an acre which
five years ago could be bought for $80.
For five years real estate in the Bir
mingham ( Alabama ) district has
grown rapidly in value. In the city
building permits granted for buildings
now in course of construction repre
sent a value of $3,000,000.
From Montana , Washington , Vir
ginia , West Virginia , Minnesota and
nearly every State the reports indicate
a prosperity never before equaled.
A ? 5 , OOO Organ Ordered.
With the funds contributed by Mr. and
Mrs. Levi P. Morton the authorities of
the new cathedral of St. John the Di
vine of New York are expecting to pos
sess the finest organ in this country , if
not in the world. The instrument is to
be built jointly by Robert Hope-Jones ,
who constructed the organ in Norchester
cathedral , England , now known as the
most powerful in the world , and Ernest
M. Skinner , who built the organs in
Grace church , New York , and Plymouth
church , Brooklyn. The proposed organ
will be constructed in a new factory at
Boston. The Hope-Jones method of tone
producing will be employed. He depends
upon the vibration of a metal tongue
against an opening in the pipe and dis
cards the reed pipes. He operates the
organ by electricity , utilizing an electric
blower and a piston , which alternately
admits and excludes the air. He uses
cubes , oblong spheres and other shapes
for his resonators.
Harmless Bullets for Practice.
A bullet that hits the mark , but does
not kill , has just been invented by Dr.
Deirliers of Paris. The details of its con
struction are not mentioned , but it is said
to be hollow and can be used several
times. In a test for duel practice pistols
were used with steel guards resembling a
sword hilt , because , though the bullet
.loes not penetrate the clothing , it will
wound naked flesh. Botli men wore gog
gles. Out of 272 shots , 202 struck soma
t of the bodies of the duelists.
Old papers lor sale at this office.
GERMANY'S CHURCH CRISIS.
Only 25 Per Cent of Her Pjistora Be
lieve In CIirlKt'.s Divinity.
Emperor William of Germany and his
oilicial advisors are deeply concerned ov > r
the imminent church crisis in Prussia , the
gravest since the reformation. The ques
tion of the divinity of Christ now threat
ens to rend German Protestantism into
two great parties , the one liberal , the
othei orthodox. The revolt in liberal
church circles against orthodoxy has been
fanned into a Same by the refusal of
the consistory and the Supreme Court
to sanction the selection of Rev. Mr.
Rowen as pastor of the church at Rem-
scheid , in Westphalia.
His offense was that he preached ser
mons in which he repudiated the divine
parentage of Christ , characterizing "it as
a myth ki spired by Greco-Pagan influ
ences.
More than 1,300 mass meetings have
been held to discuss the religious situa
tion. Taken together , they form an as
tonishing revolution of the enormous ex
tent of the growth of the so-called liberal
church doctrines.
The ferment is increasing daily , hourly.
The liberal pastors and their congrega
tions threaten secession unless the bounds
of the creed are widened bj the elimina
tion of what they call the supernatural
articles.
A leading theologian , who occupies a
university chair , says that out of 8,000
German Protestant pastors in active ser
vice at the present time not more than
one-quarter are believers in the literal
ttxt of the apostles' creed , and only one-
tenth hold to the divine inspiration of the
Bible.
Should the Kaiser call a general council
to recast the creed , the cataclysm may
be prevented. Otherwise it is predicted
on all sides the Reformed church of Ger
many will soon be split into warring fac
tions.
MODERN STEEL STRUCTURES.
Trip Through Fire-Swept Frlsoo
Shows Their Superiority.
A trip through the burned districts of
San Francisco after the fire revealed a
scene of unspeakable desolation. From
many paints on Market street , as far as
the eye could roach in any direction , there
was nothing but skeleton wa-lls and suiold-
uring rains. It was fire that wrought the
great devastatien and wiped out the en
tire business section and half the resi
dence section of the city. The great mod
ern steel structures were practically un
injured by the earthquake except for
cracked walls and. displaced plaster. All
these great structures , of course , subse
quently were utterly ruined by the flames
so far as the interior construction is con
cerned , but the walls are in most cases
intact. The most notable cases of prac
tical immunity from the shock were the
St. Francis hotel , the Fairmont hotel ,
the Flood building , the Mills building ,
the Spreckels building , the Chronicle
building , and scores of other modern steel
structures.
The branch of the United States mint
on Fifth street and the new postoffice at
Seventh and Mission streets are striking
examples of the superiority of the work
manship put into federal buildings. The
United States mint building , surrounded
by a wide space of pavement , was abso
lutely unharmed. The new postofBce
building was also virtually undamaged by
fire. The earthquake did some damage
to the different entrances to the building ,
but the walls were uninjured. Every win
dow pane , of course , > r s broken. The
Fairmont hotel , while damaged in the
interior , is left intact as to the walls.
WHEAT CONDITIONS GOOD.
\Vinter Has Lifted Its Embargo and
the Outlook Is Promising.
Winter has lifted its embargo from the
fields and the winter wheat crop stands
forth a strong , likely youngster , ready to
try for records of the past , even if he
should not reach or surpass them. Pres
ent conditions foretoken a big yield , and ,
unless there are disasters between this
and the gardening time , the crop of 190G
will be a fit mate for that of last year.
Indorsement of this prediction ccrmes in
dispatches to Chicago from all the big
wheat-producing States. Some of these
States are already blasting that thii
year's yield will exceed that of any pre
vious seasons.
Kansas , Indiana , Illinois , Ohio , Ten
nessee , Kentucky , Nebraska , Oklahoma ,
Indian Territory and Pennsylvania are
enthusiastic over the outlook. Of these ,
Ohio , Kansas , Oklahoma and Nebraska
in particular send information that there
has been a marked improvement in gen
eral conditions since the last government
report in December.
The school teachers of Pittston , Pa. , re
cently dismissed their pupils and told
them not to return until the school board
should pay back salaries due the teachers.
Judge Mack of Chicago has invited a
conference with the school board with a
view to stopping the practice of suspend
ing disorderly or unruly pupils , on the
ground that it contributes to the juvenile
delinquency cases in court.
Following are some Ohio statistics :
Children of school age , 1,230,000 ; children
in school attendance , 800,000 ; children
out of school , 450,000 ; children within
scope of labor law , 900,000 ; children il
legally employed , 100,000.
The school authorities of Waynesboro ,
Pa. , having declined to enforce the State
vaccination law , the matter is to go into
the courts. The Attorney General has
given the opinion that parents whose chil
dren have been debarred because of fail
ure to be vaccinated cannot be fined un
der the compulsory education law.
The most notable Mature of the latest
census bulletin relating to illiteracy
among our population is the -statement
that there are fewer illiterates among the
children of foreign-born parents than
among those of the natives. This is
variously accounted for , but the chief rea
son for it appears to be based on the fact
that the greatest portion of the foreign-
born children live in cities , where the
educational opportunities are better than
in the country. In the country the illit
eracy among children is 89 per 1,000 ; in
cities of over 25,000 inhabitants it IB only
10 per 1,000.
TRUST MUST SHOW BOOKS.
Federal Inquiry Into Conl Mine
OT.viicrship by IlnilrimdH.
Unless the plans of the government go
wren * entirely there will be before long
a sensational investigation of the coal
roads , which will attract as much atten
tion throughout the country in ita way
as the inquiry into the insurance com
panies did. Thus writes a Washington
correspondent.
It will be run by the same man , and
if he has. luck the coal roads will be com
pelled to come into court and produce all
their books and secret records to prove
the existence of a combination to control
the price of coal in defiance of law.
Charles E. Hughes is to be given a free
hand in the prosecution of the coal carry
ing railroads. Immunity or no immunity ,
he will be instructed to get atvfhe facts ,
and it is the belief of government offi
cials that under the recent decisions of
the Supreme Court he will be enabled to
go into the whole business of the coal
road combination.
Mr. Hughes' capacity as an investiga
tor was demonstrated by the spectacular
success of his inquiry into the insurance
business. He began that investigation
with only the power behind him of a
committee of the New York Legislature ,
whereas he will go into the study of the
coal combination backed up by the power
of the United State * government in a fedj
eral court , and with the moral and mate
rial support of the Prejident and the At
torney General.
Under the anti-trust law , as well as
under the interstate commerce law and
the Elkins law , a railroad corporation
can be directly punished by fine. Its
officers can be summoned and made to tes-
tify. They may claim immunity for
themselves , but not for their corporation.
Mr. Hughes' subpo-na will unlock every
record of every railroad , it will compel
the officers of the roads to testify as to
the acts of the corporations , and if Mr.
Hughes is as successful aa the government
officials believe he will be , the result will
be to rip open the coal combination , because -
cause afijisbne railroad is convicted of
conspirat waptr maintain prices the same
evidence witl operate on another , and so
on until the whole combination is broken
lip. <
The coming prosecution in the federal"
court may hae a beawng. on the settle
ment of the coul strike , but whether it
does or not the prosecution w.ifl be one
of the most sensational ever known in
this country. Enough evidence a&eady
had been Developed by the inter&tate com
merce commission to justify the prosecu
tion , not only of the railroads but of
some of the officials as well.
John C. Brecken'ridge has been appoint-
i ft consulting engineer for the New York
Caotral and will be engaged in the instal
lation of electricity on the New York end
of the line.
The Northern Pacific is said to have an
option on the Pacific and Idaho Northern ,
which it will exercise with a view to
building a line from Cotlouwood to Lewiston -
iston , Idaho.
President Johnson and other Norfolk
and Western officials are inspecting the
"Short Line" from Columbus to Sandus-
ky with a view , it is said , to purchasing
it from the Pennsylvania.
After a trial of two years with a lim
ited number of omnibuses in the streets
of London , England , the London power
omnibus company has ordered seventy-five
double-decked buses and has begun the
construction of the largest garage iu Eu
rope , with a floor area of 200x90 feet. The
fuel Is stored in two 1,000-gallon tanks ,
from which six cars may be charged at
one time.
Nearly all of the great trunk lines
have reported increased gross earnings
during the first three months of the year ,
and notably the New York Central , the
AYabash and the Chicago Great Western.
Bank clearings have broken all records
for any three months in the history of
the country , according to Bradstreet's ,
and the number of failures were 2.791. era
a decrease of 5 per cent as compared with
the first quarter of last year.
The sixteen railroads constituting the
Chicago Car Service Association have
served notice on the International Har
vester Company or harvester trust that
owing to the freight car shortage it will
be impossible to permit cars to go off the
tracks of the company owning them. Be
cause the trust owns the Illinois North
ern railroad , it claims the right to the 25
cents a day charge for car demurrage.
But the railroads insist upon $1 per day ,
as charged to all other manufacturers or
shippers.
Railroads in Ohio may hereafter charge
not more than two cents a mile for carry
ing passengers. The new law went into
pffect in March. On the same day that
the new rule became operative the presi
dent of a New England railroad company ,
whose main line connects Boston and
New York , announced that a uniform two-
cent rate would be adopted by his com
pany at once. The agitation for sucli a
rate is now in progress in New York ,
Pennsylvania , Virginia. Iowa. Illinois. In
diana and Nebraska. In Michigan there
is a graduated rate based on the earning
power of the road. It starts at two cents
and runs up to four cents. Wherever the
rate has been reduced the receipts from
passenger traffic have increased , as in
creased facilities for travel always induce
people to go about.
The general office of the Lake Shore at
Cleveland announce that the Twentieth
Century Limited made 108 miles in one
hour and thirty-nine minutes between
Cleveland and Toledo. This is thought to
establish a new speed record for regular
train service.
The report of the Missouri Pacific rail
way for 1903 ? hews a deficit of $18-
205 , as compared with a surplus of over
$2,000,000 the preceding year. In expla
nation of this President Gould refers to
the disastrous blizzards and floods of the
first half of the year and to the yellow
ferer quarantine.
The Frencli Bricklayer.
Samuel Gouipers , the re-elected chief
of the American Federation of Labor ,
was pointing out the good that unions
had done for workmen.
I "In France , " he said , "there are few
unions , and a French bricklayer told
me the other day that wages were , In
consequence , unreasonably low there.
"The bricklayer said with a laugh
that a friend of his In Nice , out of
work , bought on the Avenue de la Gare
a newspaper. He took the paper home
! to his attic in the squalid Rue Felix ,
! nnd his wife , after turning to the ad
vertisements , said eagerly :
"The very thing ! You must look
Into this , Marcel. It says a man Is
wanted at the Palais de la Jetee , and
he won't be worked to death , and will
be paid enough to live on. '
"The man started.
" 'Won't be worked to .death ? he
muttered.
I " 'Yes , ' said his wife ; * an paid
enough to live on. '
"He frowned.
' 'Ha , ' he said. 'Some catch about
that. ' "
Bridge Built on Wool.
At the little town of Wadebridge ,
j Cornwall. England , there is a bridge
1
1of a unique character. Owing to the
strength of the current , ordinary stone
1 foundations would not hold , and nu
merous devices were tried without suc
cess. Eventually bags of wool were
sunk In the stream and the piles driv
en in , and this strange foundation has
proved wonderfully firm and satisfac
tory.
j
.
-
Dr. Williams'Pink Pills Restored the
Patient to Perfect HeOlth
, ' And Strength.
Mrs. Mary Gagner , of No. 570 South
Summer street , Holyoke , Mass. , lias
passed through an experience which
proves tiijat some of tb.p greatest bless-
wigs of life may lie twiiiiu easy reach
nud-yjjt be foiuul o ily by nieru ehsiuce.
A fewyearsngo-\vliilfi she was employed
iu die iwijl * fahe was suddenly seized
with diaziuess and grqat weakness. " I
so weak at times , " she says , "that
fras nardly stand , aud my h'ead be
came so dizzy that it seemed aa if the
floor was moving around.
"My condition at last became so bad
that I was obliged to pive up work in the
mill , and later still I became so feebly
that I could not even attend to me
household duties. After the slightest
xertiou I had to lie down and rest until
t regained strength.
"A friend who had used Dr.Williams'
Pink Pills for Pale People urged rue to
try them. I bought a box and began to
take them. The benefit was so positive
and so quickly evident that I continued
to use the pills until I had taken altogether - '
gether six boxes. By thafc time I was
Entirely cured , aud for two years I luive
baxl no return of my trouble. I am now i
In the best of health and able to attend |
to all my duties. I am glad to ackuowl- |
edge the benefit I received and I hope j
that my statement may be the means of
inducing others who may suffer 111 this
\vay to try this wonderful medicine. "
The secret of the power of Dr. Wil
liams' Pink Pills in cases of debility ,
such as Mrs. Gaguer's lies in the fact
that they make new blood , and every or
gan and even every tiny nerve in the
body feels the stir of a new tide of
strength.
Dr. Williams'Pink Pills are sold by all
druggists or will be sent , postpaid , on
receipt of price , 50 cents per box , six
boxes for § 2.50 , by the Dr. Williams
Medicine Company , Schenectady , 1ST. Y.
Don't be angry with the coal man. Ko
is doing you the best he can.
CUBES CONSTIPATION
It is just about impossible to be
sick when the bowels are right and
not posssible to be well when they
are wrong- . Through its action on
the bowels ,
t * p * t *
My
cleans the body inside and leaves
no lodging place for disease. If for
once you wish to know how it feels
to be thoroughly wei , Jve this
famous laxative tea a trial.
Sold by all dealers at 250. and 500. I
An EstnljH.tlicri Reputation.
A deputy sheriff and chief of
of a Rhode Island city , known In his
lifetime as a man whose word conkJ
always be taken , once gave a whimsi
cal demonstration of his straightfor
wardness. One day , according to a
writer in the Boston Herald , a grocer
went to him for Information about a
certain Joe White , who had applied for-
credit at his store.
"Good-morniug , Sheriff ! "
"Morning ! "
"Do you know Joe White ? "
"Yes. "
"What kind of a feller is he ? "
"Putty fair. "
"Is he honest ? "
"Honest ? I should say so. Dec *
arrested twice for stealing , and
quitted both times. "
LAS
W. L. Douglas S4.OO CHt Edge Lsno
cannot be equalled atany price.
* ' w
fs S/KCS
JULY 6. I86-
CAPITAI.C
W. L * DOUGLAS MAXES & SELLS R1OSJE
MEK'S $3.SO SHOESTHANAfiYOTHEifL
MANUFACTURER IN THE WORLD.
< M fl ( inn REWARD to anyone who ca.i
0 I UjUUU disprove this statement.
! i I could take you into my three large factorles > -
at Brockton , Mass. , and show you the infinite-
care with which every pair of shoes la made , you
would realize why \V. L. Douglas $3.50 shoes
cost more to make , why they hold their shnpr.
tit better , wear longer , and are of greater
intrinsic value than any other $3.50 shoe.
W. L. Douglas Sfpong tifiade Skoco for
, $2.5O , $2.GD. Boys' School &
CAUTION.Insist upon having W.L.Doag-
Ins shoes. Take no substitute. None genuine-
without his name and price stamped on bottom.
Fast Color Eyelets used ; they will not wear brassy ,
Write for Illustrated Catalog.
W. I , . UOUGI AS.Brocfcton ,
That Delightful Aid to Health
Toilet Antisepticr
Whitens the teeth purifiesr
mouth and breath cures nasal
catarrh , sore throat , sore eyes ,
and by direct application cures-
all inflamed , ulcerated and.
catarrhal conditions caused by *
feminine ills.
Paxtine possesses extraordinary-
cleansing , healing and gernu--
cidal qualities unlike anything"
else. At all druggists. 50 cents-
LARGE TRIAL PACKAGE F2E2 :
The R. Paitoa Co. , Boston , Mass-
MOTHER GRAY'S
SWEET POWDERS
ITT FOR CHILDREM ,
A Certain Cnro for .FeverlHbn iw > .
Constipation , IIca.diicie9
Stomach Troubles , Teething ;
Diaordern , and Dentroy
Mother Gray , Worms. The ? Break op-Col MS
ItarsoinObild- in 24 Uours. At all Crnctfsts. iSc
ren's Hon-e , Earnole mailed FREE Artdrwa.
' A. S. OLMSTED. Lc Roy. H
S. C. X. U. - - Xo. 18 1306.
BUY FOR YOUR HOME A HAfiDSOME
and add to its comforts tha pleasure of sweet , rich-
delightful mnsic. We v.-iU sell you one direct from
our factory at a price very close to actual costof mao-
ufacturins. and let you pay for it. if you prefer ,
En Payments to Suit You.
For over 25 years the Lakeside Orjrans have beca
recognised as the bstt lor tone , durability and appear
ance. What more can be desired ?
Nearly 50.CGO ncvr in use. A creat variety of styles
of cases to select from. The Act Jens embrace every
combination possible to put ia a reed organ.
SOLD ALWAYS WITH A 10-YEAR GUARANTEE
Write to us before buying : elsewhere. If you -want
an organ and v/ant the Best &i Lowest Price you caa
easily secure it from us.
ILLUSTBATED BOOKLET FEEE. It win pay you to
write for it to-day. Ack all the questions you desire
we will cheerfully answer them.
LAKESIDE ORGAN COMPANY ,
246-250 W. Lake St. , CHICAGO
Sale Ten Million Boxes a Year.
THE FAMILY'S FAVORITE HEDECSKE
CATHAR.TIC
BEST FOR THE BOWELS